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    1991 conference summary

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    "The proceedings of a conference on the development of a national strategy for occupational musculoskeletal injuries were summarized. Specific topics discussed included the scope of the national program, major federal government initiatives, the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act, definition of acute and chronic musculoskeletal injuries, anatomical structures of concern, multifactored risk model development, methods used for identifying job hazards, nonoccupational factors and the risk of an occupational musculoskeletal injury, fundamental research needed to understand the causes of occupational musculoskeletal injuries, and the research needed to provide the most effective prevention strategies. Evidence indicated that musculoskeletal injuries include the most costly types of occupational injuries and that they affect several million workers each year. Areas needing additional research include identifying hazardous job stressors, objectively measuring and quantifying job stress, identifying people at risk for musculoskeletal injuries, fundamental biomechanics, job hazard surveillance, and industrial planning and social/organizational issues." - NIOSHTIC-2editors, Don B. Chaffin, Lawrence J. Fine ; with editorial assistance from Sheryl Ulin, Susan Palmiter ; text production by Patricia Terrell ; cover concept by Teryl Lynn."The Conference, Workshops and this Report were co-sponsored by: The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health Centers for Disease Control, The Michigan Center for Occupational Health and Safety Engineering University of Michigan [and] The National Institute for Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases National Institutes of Health.""November 1992."Also available via the World Wide Web.Includes bibliographical references (p. 22)

    [Charter and ordinances]

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    Mode of access: Internet

    Digital Photographs

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    https://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/150364/2/objects.ziphttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/150364/4/metadata.zi

    University of Michigan Football Team, 1916

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    <p>Back Row: Egmont Hildner, Joseph Hanish, Alan Boyd, Albert Martens, Philip Raymond, Nathaniel(?) Robbins, Harry McCallum, Elton Wieman, Richard Weske</p><p>Middle Row: asst. coach Prentiss Douglass, asst. coach Miller Pontius, Donald Bathrick, Clifford Gracey, N.J. Brazell, James Sharpe, Clarence Skinner, R. Glenn Dunn, John Goodsell, Alvin Loucks, Sidney Eggert, trainer Harry Tuthill</p><p>Front Row: Cedric Smith, Frank Willard, Walter Nieman, Maurice Dunne, coach Fielding Yost, John Maulbetsch, Fred Rehor, Clifford Sparks, James Whalen, Harold Zeiger</p

    Wrecking old Cooley House [Michigan Union site]

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    The residence of Judge Thomas M. Cooley became the first home for the Michigan Union. The house was renovated in 1906-1907, opened for student use in 1907, and in 1912 an addition was built. In 1916, the original house was razed to make room for a new Michigan Union building, which opened in 1919. The 1912 addition was moved to the north and used as a ballroom for a time.; &#x0a;; &#x0a;; On verso: "Summer 1916."; &#x0a;; &#x0a;; Image view from southwest. Image is creased and torn upper right and lower left

    Harry Burns Hutchins

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    Professor of law and president of the University of Michiga

    Michigan Union, site of. Home of Judge Thomas M. Cooley, Michigan, 1851 State Street

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    The residence of Judge Thomas M. Cooley became the first home for the Michigan Union. The house was renovated in 1906-1907, opened for student use in 1907, and in 1912 an addition was built. In 1916, the original house was razed to make room for a new Michigan Union building, which opened in 1919. The 1912 addition was moved to the north and used as a ballroom for a time.; &#x0a;; &#x0a;; On verso: "Mrs. Baker.

    Law Building (new)

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    Jordan & Anderson, architecture firm. The Law Building was built in 1863 on the corner of State Street and North University Avenue. In 1863 it was occupied by the Law School, the University Chapel (until 1873) and the General Library (until 1883). Renovated and enlarged in 1893 and then again in 1898 by architects Spier and Rohn of Detroit, Michigan who removed the tower and added a new south wing. Renamed Haven Hall in 1933 when the Law School moved to Hutchins Hall in the Law Quadrangle. Haven Hall then became one of the major buildings of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, with space given to the Departments of History, Sociology, Journalism, and the Bureau of Government and its library collection. Extension Division also had offices in Haven Hall. The building was destroyed by fire in 1950. &#x0a;; &#x0a;; Photographer's stamp on mount

    UM Football vs? at Ferry Field

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    (Original loaned to library for scanning
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